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Stolen Property -- be on the lookout for this Big Boy artifact

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Posted by LUKE PERKOWSKI on Tuesday, February 10, 2015 10:42 AM

quote user="Anonymous"]If I was going to take something I would at least take the Bell so I could use it at home.

But a pressure gauge?

 

What an odd thing to steal. Maybe it was the easiest thing for them to swipe.  How dare they ravage such a valuable preserved locomotive!Angry

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Posted by samfp1943 on Tuesday, February 3, 2015 10:21 AM

tree68

We had four horns stolen last winter...  

I probably mentioned them here, but by now they're either on someone's shelf as part of their collection, or in a truck (or other vehicle) somewhere.  

There's a video of YouTube from several years ago with a fire truck equipped with a train horn, and I've got a picture of a NYC rescue truck clearly equipped with a train horn...

 

Down in Alabama (Coal Fields West of Birmingham...The Coal Truck drivers seemed to favor the Diesel Locomotive Air Horns, instead of the conventional (small) ones.

    Close to an unsuspecting motorist, and give them a 'Blast'. One can just imagine the reaction of the occupant of an auto along side, or in front of the 'Coal Bucket'... West Virginia seemed to have similar issues with the Diesel Air Horns on Coal Trucks.  I think that in some jurisdictions they have been 'outlawed' on road vehicles(?)

 

 

 


 

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Posted by LUKE PERKOWSKI on Tuesday, February 3, 2015 8:41 AM

Yeah, that seems to be a rather strange thing to steal.

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Posted by Electroliner 1935 on Saturday, January 31, 2015 8:17 PM

No. Make a fuse out of him but don't make a train crew have to run him down and all the delay and paperwork that results. 

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Posted by ccltrains on Friday, January 23, 2015 7:52 AM
A few years before I entered West Virginia University (50's) one of the fraternities (not mine) went to the B&O yard in Grafon and stole a bello from one of the locomotives. The railroad understandably was mad and sent their police to the university but could not locate the bell. By the time I enrolled all was forgiven and the frat had the bell on a cart and used it at games etc.
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Posted by tree68 on Tuesday, January 20, 2015 1:36 PM

We had four horns stolen last winter...  

I probably mentioned them here, but by now they're either on someone's shelf as part of their collection, or in a truck (or other vehicle) somewhere.  

There's a video of YouTube from several years ago with a fire truck equipped with a train horn, and I've got a picture of a NYC rescue truck clearly equipped with a train horn...

LarryWhistling
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Posted by dknelson on Tuesday, January 20, 2015 10:57 AM

I am bumping my old post because new information might have come to light

See original posting for amendment

Dave Nelson

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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, December 1, 2004 1:21 AM
QUOTE: The museum I help out near San Diego - the Pacific Southwest Railway Museum (www.psrm.org) had 5 (?) diesel locomotive horns stolen one nite early this year. Believe that's becoming more rampant - truckers are installing those horns on the trucks.


just so no one gets the wrong idea here, the train horns that truckers are putting on their rigs are sold in truckstops everywhere. i have yet to meet more than 2 truckers that have an actual horn from a train on their rig. if you want to find out where many real train horns end up for sale, just check ebay.



it's getting pretty bad when someone would stoop so low as to steam any little thing off of a steam loco just to sell it to some rabid railfan. but people will buy anything without ever thinking of where it might have come from.
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 9:17 PM
It's this kind of theft which drives display owners and museums to close cabs from the general public.

A shame. I've never seen the inside of a Big Boy cab, except for pictures, and it would be nice to sit on the engineer's seat just to get a feel for the view.

A couple of museums I have talked to have had the kinds of thefts spoken of above. They tiredly replace builder's plates with replicas... which get stolen.

Erik
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Posted by UPTRAIN on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 7:25 PM
Maybe the *** had a big air compressor and put it on that, just leave stuff alone, whoever you are!!![:(!][V][:(][:O][*^_^*][banghead][censored][|(][soapbox][tdn]

Pump

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Posted by ChooChooMike on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 4:41 PM
I visited that Big Boy (www.trainweb.org/rlhs) a few weeks ago here in the LA area. The steam pressure gauge is still there, I believe it was the steam heat pressure gauge that was stolen. None-the-less, still an irreplaceable item [:(] and really sucks that someone would stoop that low. From what I understand, this happens all too often. (steam gauge up in Oregon earlier this year ?)

When the 3751 (www.sbrhs.org) crew puts that beauty to bed here in LA, they remove all the JEWELRY as they call it - the cab gauges, running lights, builder plates, probably anything that isn't welded or securely mounted down, including the whistle. Unfortunately, the 3751 sits outside with a tarp over it, though it's a bit more secure behind Amtrak's fenced in area.

The museum I help out near San Diego - the Pacific Southwest Railway Museum (www.psrm.org) had 5 (?) diesel locomotive horns stolen one nite early this year. Believe that's becoming more rampant - truckers are installing those horns on the trucks.

The Orange Empire Railway Museum (www.oerm.org) made a plastic replica of the builders plate from their VC2 2-6-2 and sold them as souvenirs to raise $ for the rebuild. Great idea !! Now I have a replica plate sitting on my desk knowing that I helped to preserve live steam !!

Mike
I model steam in 12" - 1' scale :D
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Posted by SALfan on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 11:09 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by dknelson

There used to be several makers of replica builders plates and steam locomotive numbers. They were cast plaster but painted and weathered very realistically. Sometimes you had to pick them up to know they were not fake. These days I supposed resins would be used for greater durability (the plaster replicas shattered if dropped, and they tended to chip).


There's also another alternative for very realistic-looking replicas. High-density foam can be routed on a computer-controlled router, then have liquid finishes applied to mimic the look of almost any metal. I've seen some of the products, and I wouldn't know the difference without picking them up. They should be more durable and more forgiving of abuse than plaster.
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 10:47 AM
Most likely some one took some thing easily removed and of no real value to them. It makes the randomness of the "attack" even more criminal in my mind. My guess is that the artifact will never show up on a re-sale table, but will remain in some sick SOB's closet where it will provide cheap thrills of the theft.
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 8:51 AM
Not only are train items stolen, but depots are stripped any time a railroad gives up a building. I've been restoring a depot and items are missing out of it including some items which were taken after I had received the deed to the building.
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Posted by dknelson on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 7:53 AM
There used to be several makers of replica builders plates and steam locomotive numbers. They were cast plaster but painted and weathered very realistically. Sometimes you had to pick them up to know they were not fake. These days I supposed resins would be used for greater durability (the plaster replicas shattered if dropped, and they tended to chip). Since there seems to be no decrease in the interest in steam locomotive collectibles, I am surprised these aren't still available.
I am a bit too "young" (!??!!) to have a real memory of working steam but I am not too young to have lived through the era when the nation's scrap yards were still dealing with trying to scrap a half century's worth of steam locomotives. Back in the 1960s there were plenty of legit steam artifacts for sale -- bells, headlights, whistles, and so on. Have you ever seen a steam locomotive headlight on a table? They are huge. Everything about steam is huge -- there are not many collectibles that can be readily picked up and walked away with.
I have seen steam pressure gauges for sale at swap meets. Because to my untrained eye they look exactly like a pressure gauge you might see on an old junior high school heating boiler I had no interest in them.
One pity is that things like that gauge might eventually be needed by the UP to keep its steam locomotives in operation.
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Posted by GMS-AU on Tuesday, November 30, 2004 3:35 AM
I think railfans are their own worst enemy. When you go to swap meets anything from builders plates to number boards to control stands can be bought or sold. Are these all purchased legitimately from loco wreckers? While most of us are responsible there are the few that ruin it for the rest, and take their passion to the extreme. Isn't that why two rare Baldwins ( or are they FM's? I remember the article in Trains but not sure of the details now ) I think that are privately owned are kept in locked sheds so souvenir hunters don't strip them? Now nobody can see them because of a reckless few. OK take a bell, but where does it stop?

G M Simpson
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, November 29, 2004 10:06 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by bawbyk

QUOTE: Originally posted by CHPENNSYLVANIA

I can't believe this. But I am with macguy above, I would rather have the bell than a guage.


Which means -- you don't think the individual was wrong to take it in the first place.....


No, you missunderstood me.

I was being sarcastic, because it seemed to me that a pressure gauge would not be the first choice of something to steal.

I do not think what happened was appropriate.
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Posted by stmtrolleyguy on Monday, November 29, 2004 9:07 PM
People who steal historical artifacts from preserved equipment don't deserve the title of railfan.

However, reading the above threads, if people dream of having parts, why hasn't anybody got a group of people together willing to fun a re-casting of replica parts from the real preserved locomotives? It might be expensive, but if people are willing to stoop down to stealing, then mayby they woul be willing to pay. The only obvious drawback I can see is that the replicas would need to be marked so no one could try and sell them as the real thing.

If a preservation group started the effort, who knows. Maybe selling replica parts could turn into a profitable venture.

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Posted by nobullchitbids on Monday, November 29, 2004 8:53 PM
Make sure this information is made available to e.g. used-brass and railroadiana dealers, since they (legitimately) sell items like this and would be the most likely place to "fence" such material.
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Posted by rolland on Monday, November 29, 2004 8:52 PM
Maybe the thief needed somthing to check his "butt pressure".
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, November 29, 2004 8:12 PM
this person is lower than worm dirt
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Posted by bawbyk on Monday, November 29, 2004 8:09 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by CHPENNSYLVANIA

I can't believe this. But I am with macguy above, I would rather have the bell than a guage.


Which means -- you don't think the individual was wrong to take it in the first place.....
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, November 29, 2004 5:42 PM
I can't believe this. But I am with macguy above, I would rather have the bell than a guage.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, November 29, 2004 5:09 PM
If I was going to take something I would at least take the Bell so I could use it at home.

But a pressure gauge?
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Posted by railman on Monday, November 29, 2004 5:04 PM
Why do they do this stupid stuff! Leave it alone!
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Posted by espeefoamer on Monday, November 29, 2004 5:02 PM
And whoever did it should be tied to a nearby main line[:(!]!
Ride Amtrak. Cats Rule, Dogs Drool.
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Posted by dldance on Monday, November 29, 2004 2:35 PM
thanks for the heads up

dd
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Stolen Property -- be on the lookout for this Big Boy artifact
Posted by dknelson on Monday, November 29, 2004 8:28 AM

An ad on page 82 of the January Trains magazine says that a pressure gauge was stolen from the preserved Big Boy at the LA Fairgrounds in Pomona CA.
The ad has a photo of the gauge and contact info for anyone who sees this at a train show or on ebay etc. UPBB4014@yahoo.com

AMENDED POST in 2015:  I am bumping up my own old posting because a Big Boy gauge recently became available on Ebay. I have no information that it is one of the stolen items, but those with an interest in the topic may want to take a look:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Union-Pacific-Big-Boy-Boiler-Gauge-MR-16-/400845782686?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item5d54453e9e



Dave Nelson

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